GOVT-2305-082 (40934) US Government Hybrid Course, Fall 2009

Instructor: Kris S. Seago
Location: Northridge Campus (NRG), Room 2119
Days: Tuesday
Time: 10:35 a.m. - 11:50 a.m.
Office: 2142 Northridge
Office hours: MW: 9:00 a.m. - Noon
TTH: 9:00 a.m. - 10:30 a.m.
And by appointment
email: kseago@austincc.edu (preferred communication method)
AIM: ksseago (logged on during office hours) Send message using AIM
Web page: http://www.austincc.edu/kseago
Phone: (512) 223-4231 (office phone, secondary communication method)

NAVIGATION

COURSE GOALS

This course is an introduction to United States national government. The course includes an introduction to a framework for analyzing United States government and politics, the constitutional basis for United States government and politics, the processes of United States government and politics, the institutions of United States government and politics, and the policies of United States government and politics.

During the course of the semester I hope to pique your interest in becoming an informed, responsible, and critical citizen.

EXPECTATIONS

Even though this is an introductory class that most (if not all) of you “have to” take, I expect high quality performance. You are responsible for the material covered, including information on deadlines and examinations. Successfully completing this course will require a significant amount of time per week.

TECHNOLOGY REQUIREMENTS

In addition to a basic technological prowess, there are certain technology requirements you’ll need to take full advantage of the resources used in this course.

NOTE: ACC’s Instructional Computing & Technology Services provides computing resources for ACC students to complete course assignments, write papers, conduct research, use specialized course software, search the Internet and communicate with their professors and classmates via web e-mail.

COURSE READINGS

Required readings are drawn from:

Joseph Losco and Ralph Baker. Am Gov 2009. First Edition, McGraw-Hill, 2009. ISBN: 9780077240257 0077240251

NOTE: The textbook is available from multiple sources. Prior versions may cover the same material, but the page numbers do not map to the page numbers listed in the syllabus.

You should read the national section of a major national newspaper (New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Christian Science Monitor, Los Angeles Times, Dallas Morning News, Houston Chronicle, Austin American Statesman) in print or online. The American Statesman is available at a substantial discount to ACC students. I encourage you to watch the national news on at least one television station (KLRU 18, KVUE 24, KXAN 36, KEYE 42, CNN, or MSNBC) and to listen to National Public Radio (NPR) on KUT-FM (90.5) or at www.kut.org before class.

I’ll occasionally publish supplemental readings, notes, and audio or video files. I’ll notify you via email with either full text or the URLs for stories I expect you to read.

Strongly suggested reading:

Lynne Truss. Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation. 2004. Gotham. ISBN: 9781592400874.

This wonderful little grammar guide is available from multiple sources. If you’re grammir is gud; dont bye this book. If under tha udder hand ur grimmer is’nt sew gud, buy all mens, dew ur self uh faver and bi dis buk.

COMMUNICATION

Email will be our primary form of correspondence. I read class-related email between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday-Friday. If you send email outside these hours I may not reply until my normal email hours the next business day. I don’t typically read class-related email on the weekends. I’ll typically reply within one business day.

In addition, I’ll be logged on to AOL Instant Messenger (ksseago) and available by phone (512.223.4231) during my “in-person” office hours.

GRADES

There are three components to your final grade:

1. Exams

There are four exams. Each exam counts for 12.5% of your final grade. The fourth exam is NOT comprehensive.

In general, I’ll have your exams graded no more than one week after the deadline.

2. Participation

Participation counts for 16.6% of your final grade. You will use Blackboard’s discussion boards (available in the course’s left navigation bar) to participate.

I’ll post four questions (worth 4.15% each) in the discussion boards over the course of the semester. You must post at least two reasoned replies to each question.

First, you must post an original response to the forum question itself. This post must include at least one link to an online source supporting your position.

Second, you must post a response to something one of your classmates has posted. Take care to formulate arguments, not simple declarative statements. An argument is a well-developed, clearly stated line of reasoning aimed at convincing others of the truth or fallacy of a statement.

“Reasoned” means you’ve thought about the question and present your ideas in a coherent fashion. It does not mean that I or your classmates agree with you.

You will encounter a variety of viewpoints on volatile topics over the course of the semester. You may disagree, perhaps strongly, with opinions expressed by your classmates (and almost certainly, me).

As long as we treat each other with respect, these differences enhance class discussion and create an atmosphere where we learn from each other. Rest assured that your grades will not be influenced by beliefs or ideas expressed on the discussion boards.

And though all the winds of doctrine were let loose to play upon the earth, so Truth be in the field, we do injuriously, by licensing and prohibiting, to misdoubt her strength. Let her and Falsehood grapple; who ever knew Truth put to the worse, in a free and open encounter?
--Milton, Aeropagitica, 1643

Participation is graded on whether your comments are thoughtful and coherent, respond directly to the question (or another post in the board), contribute something new to the discussion, reflect an effort to move the discussion along, bring some evidence to your argument, and reflect an understanding of the course materials.

NOTE: I take spelling, grammar, and composition into account when grading your work. Your work must be well-written to receive full credit.

3. Political weblog (“blog”)

Establishing a U.S. national government-oriented political blog counts for 33.3% of your final grade. You’ll display your knowledge and ability to think critically about national government during this process. You’ll develop your blog in eight discrete stages. Each stage is worth 4.17% of your final grade.

Stage One: Creation and initial blogroll

Deadline: September 4, 2009

NOTE: The deadline means that you have until 11:59:59 p.m. on the day the assignment is due to submit the assignment via Blackboard’s assignment feature. Given that “stuff happens,” and it typically happens when you least expect it, I strongly suggest you not wait until the last possible second to submit your assignments.

Create a blog using Google’s Blogger service. Name your blog something meaningful and socially acceptable. Select a name that is general enough to encompass a variety of topics about U.S. national government.

Choose a template that allows you to display these elements: a meaningful title, individual articles, comments on those articles, and a link list where you’ll add a list of recommended sources and other blogs (a blogroll). Take care to enable comments on your blog.

NOTE: You are writing for an academic audience. Focus on readability. Don’t use a template that’s hard to read. For instance, light text on a dark (especially black) background is extremely hard to read.

Use Blogger’s “link list” feature to create an initial blogroll. Start with these suggested sources. Include at least five of the mainstream sources and five blogs. You may wish to create separate lists for the mainstream sources and the blogs. Feel free to add other sources to your blogroll. You’ll be adding links to your colleague’s blogs in the next stage.

Add political information to your “Profile,” including your political ideology, influences (if any), and your political experiences (voting, working on a campaign, and so forth). Why are you taking the class? What do you hope to get out of the class?

I’ve created a very simple (and very boring) blog demonstrating the essential elements for this first stage

Kris S. Seago’s Demo Govt 2305 Blog

Send me the complete link <http://nameofyourblog.blogspot.com> to your blog using Blackboard’s Assignment feature before the deadline.

Stage Two: Article introduction and colleague’s blogs

Deadline: September 18, 2009

Create a substantial (100-200 words) post (new article) on your blog that introduces, summarizes, and provides an embedded link to an article (news, editorial, or commentary) about U.S. national government from one of these suggested sources. Tell your readers why you think the article is worth reading.

Use Blogger’s “link list” feature to publish a blogroll consisting of links to your classmate’s blogs. I’ll publish the links under the Class Blog Links link in the left-hand navigation bar of the Blackboard page for this class. The links will be available as soon as I’ve finished grading your Stage One assignments.

Send me the link to your blog using Blackboard’s Assignment feature before the deadline.

Stage Three: Critique an editorial or commentary from a national newspaper

Deadline: October 2, 2009

Write a substantial (250-500 words) critique of an editorial or commentary (NOT a pure news article, but an article where the author is making an argument) about U.S. national government from the opinion/editorial/commentary section of one of the national newspapers listed in the suggested sources. Provide an embedded link to the work you are critiquing. Evaluate the author’s intended audience, the author’s credibility, and their argument (including their claim, evidence, and logic). You may agree or disagree with the author. A guide to critical thinking is available under the Handouts link in Blackboard. Post your critique to your blog.

Send me the direct link to the post you’ve written (not a general link to your blog) using Blackboard’s Assignment feature before the deadline.

Stage Four: Critique an editorial or commentary from a blog

Deadline: October 23, 2009

Write a substantial (250-500 words) critique of an editorial or commentary from one of the blogs listed in the suggested sources. Provide an embedded link to the work you are critiquing. Evaluate the author’s intended audience, the author’s credibility, and their argument (including their claim, evidence, and logic). You may agree or disagree with the author.

Send me the direct link to the post you’ve written (not a general link to your blog) using Blackboard’s Assignment feature before the deadline.

Stage Five: Original editorial or commentary #1

Deadline: November 6, 2009

Write a substantial (250-500 words) and original editorial or commentary about U.S. national government. Post this article to your blog.

Send me the direct link to the post you’ve written using Blackboard’s Assignment feature before the deadline.

Stage Six: Comment on a colleague’s work #1

Deadline: November 20, 2009

Write a constructive and reasoned criticism or commentary on one of your colleague’s editorial or commentary published in Stage Five. Provide an embedded link to your colleague’s work. Post this article to your blog as a standalone post and as a comment in your classmate’s blog.

Send me the direct link to the post you’ve written on your blog using Blackboard’s Assignment feature before the deadline.

Stage Seven: Original editorial or commentary #2

Deadline: December 4, 2009

Write a substantial (250-500 word) and original editorial or commentary about U.S. national government. Post this article to your blog.

Send me the direct link to the post you’ve written using Blackboard’s Assignment feature before the deadline.

Stage Eight: Comment on a colleague’s work #2

Deadline: December 11, 2009

Write a constructive and reasoned criticism or commentary on one of your colleague’s editorial or commentary published in Stage Seven. Provide an embedded link to your colleague’s work. Post this article to your blog as a standalone post and as a comment in your classmate’s blog.

Send me the direct link to the post you’ve written on your blog using Blackboard’s Assignment feature before the deadline.

Grading

I grade your blogs on their content, not their aesthetic presentation. Write for a formal academic audience when writing your introductions, commentaries, and articles. Think of these as papers submitted and published by new media instead of ink and paper (or toner and paper).

NOTE: I take spelling, grammar, and composition into account when grading your work. Your work must be well-written to receive full credit.

Be respectful of others.

I’ll be glad to offer feedback given 48 hours notice before the deadline. If you want feedback, request it by email, with a link to the posting for which you desire feedback. I’ll offer feedback via email.

OTHER GUIDELINES (How to do well in this class)
 
1. Visit ACC’s Distance Learning Passport to Success workshop. Passport to Success is an interactive workshop providing basic information about Distance Learning at ACC. The workshop explores what is expected of students in a DL course, offers study tips and strategies on how to complete a DL course successfully, and gives direct links to Distance Learning and ACC support services available online and on-site.
 
2. Set aside enough time to be successful. This is a challenging and time-intensive course.
 
3. Stay on top of deadlines. The class moves very quickly, and missed deadlines impair your ability to pass the course.
 
4. Make-up exams are granted only under extraordinary circumstances, such as a family emergency or illness severe enough to require a visit to a health professional. Contact me as soon as possible if your going to miss and exam.
 
5. Scholastic dishonesty is not acceptable. In accordance with ACC policy, I will issue a grade of “F” to any student caught engaging in academic dishonesty.
 
Acts prohibited by the college for which discipline may be administered include scholastic dishonesty. Scholastic dishonesty includes but is not limited to cheating on an exam or quiz, plagiarism (using another author’s words or arguments without attribution), and collusion (the unauthorized collaboration with another person in preparing written work for fulfillment of any course requirement).
 
Academic work submitted by students shall be the result of their thought, research, or self-expression. Academic work is defined as, but not limited to, tests, quizzes (whether taken electronically or on paper), projects (either individual or group), classroom presentations, papers, and homework.
 
If a student commits any of the above actions, the instructor will seek disciplinary action in the form of an academic penalty (which will include a zero on the academic work in question and may include a course grade of “F”). Such disciplinary action will be at the discretion of the instructor following College procedures outlined in the Student Handbook.
 
6. Incompletes
 
I will assign a temporary grade of “I” under the following conditions: (a) you have a valid reason for requesting an incomplete and have completed at least three-quarters of the course requirements; (b) you request an Incomplete and complete the required form; and, (c) you agree to complete the course by the deadline established on the Report of Incomplete Grade form.
 
7. Withdrawing from the course
 
The last day to withdraw is Monday, November 23. You must withdraw on your own. Failure to withdraw combined with failure to complete the course requirements will result in an “F.”
 
8. Office for Students with Disabilities
 
Each ACC campus offers support services for students with documented physical, cognitive, or psychological disabilities. Students with disabilities must request reasonable accommodations through the Office for Students with Disabilities on the campus where they expect to take the majority of their classes. Students are encouraged to do this three weeks before the start of the semester.

COURSE SCHEDULE

Follow the links to access supplemental materials. Take care to read the appropriate textbook and supplemental materials BEFORE class.



Date
Topic (supplemental material)
Textbook readings

August 25, 2009 (Class day) Introduction  
  Why do we need government? Textbook, Chapter 1
  Why study national government?  
  Just how stupid are we? (First page only)  
  A better informed democracy  
  Declaration of Independence Textbook, p. 414
  Federalist papers  
September 1, 2009 (Class day) Federalist #10 Textbook, p. 428
  The Constitution Textbook, Chapter 2
September 4, 2009 Blog Stage 1 due  
September 8, 2009 (Class day) Federalism Textbook, Chapter 3
September 11, 2009 Participation 1 deadline  
September 15, 2009 (Class day) Exam 1  
September 18, 2009 Blog stage 2 due  
  Public opinion and socialization Chapter 6
  Opinion Polling  
  Landon in a Landslide  
  How are polls conducted? (pdf)  
September 22, 2009 (Class day) Questions and answers for polling skeptics (pdf)  
  Mass media and politics Chapter 10
  That's Infotainment!  
  Who owns the media?  
  Does ownership matter?  
  Is the world really that scary?  
September 29, 2009 (Class day) Is Jon Stewart the Most Trusted Man in America?  
October 2, 2009 Blog stage 3 due  
  Political parties Textbook, Pages 195 - 210
  Campaigns Textbook, Pages 210 - 223
  Participation, voting, and elections Chapter 7
  Don't vote  
  Economic voting (.mov file)  
  Predicting this year's election  
October 6, 2009 (Class day) Electronic voting (video)  
October 9, 2009 Participation topic 2 due  
October 13, 2009 (Class day) Exam 2  
  Interest groups Textbook, Chapter 8
  What role do interest groups play?  
  Congress Textbook, Chapter 11
  Trustees or delegates?  
  2003 Texas redistricting  
  Sociodemographics  
  Congressional leadership  
  Earmarks  
October 20, 2009 (Class day) Filibusters  
October 23, 2009 Blog stage 4 due  
  Presidency Textbook, Chapter 12
  The electoral college  
  2008 timeline  
  Impeachment (video)  
October 27, 2009 (Class day) Warrantless wiretapping  
  Judiciary Textbook, Chapter 14
  Texas' criminal classification  
  The current court  
November 3, 2009 (Class day) District of Columbia v. Heller (audio)  
November 6, 2009 Blog stage 5 due  
November 10, 2009 (Class day) Exam 3  
November 13, 2009 Participation topic 3 due  
  Civil liberties Chapter 4
  Was the Bill of Rights a good idea?  
  “Incorporating” the Bill of Rights  
        Barron v. Baltimore  
        Palko v. Connecticutt  
  Criminal procedure  
        Gideon v. Wainwright  
        Miranda v. Arizona  
        Louisianna v. Resweber  
  The Exclusionary Rule  
        Wolf v. Colorado  
        Mapp v. Ohio  
  Privacy  
        Griswold v. Connecticutt  
        Roe v. Wade  
        Gonzalez v. Carhart  
  Freedom of expression  
        Texas v. Johnson  
  Freedom of religion  
        Lemon v. Kurtzman (3 prong test)  
  School prayer  
        Engel v. Vitale  
        Abington v. Schempp  
  Flag salute  
        Minersville School District v. Gobitis  
        W Va. State Board of Ed. v. Barnette  
  Intelligent Design  
        Edwards v. Aguillard  
  Drugs as Sacrament  
November 17, 2009 (Class day)       Employment Division v. Smith  
November 20, 2009 Blog stage 6 due  
November 23, 2009 Last day to withdraw  
  Civil rights Chapter 5
  Plessy v. Ferguson  
  Sweatt v. Painter  
  Brown v. Board of Education  
  Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Ed.  
  Regents of the University of California v. Bakke  
  Hopwood v. Texas  
  The Evolution of Voting Rights  
  Disenfranchisement  
November 24, 2009 Alabama's Literacy test  
November 30, 2009 Participation topic 4 due  
December 1, 2009 Finish up and review  
December 4, 2009 Blog stage 7 due  
December 8, 2009 Exam 4  
December 11, 2009 Blog stage 8 due